Posted on 01/14/2005 4:46:12 AM PST by TGOMedia
It occurs to me that in titling a column Ted Kennedy is Not Smart, I find myself in a position most columnists would greatly admire, namely preaching to one of the largest choirs ever assembled around a political notion. But if anyone in the choir has ever wavered, their resolve will be strengthened by the senators Wednesday speech at the National Press Club, in which he was Uniquely Teddy: Bumbling and intellectually dishonest, lying to himself and his audience, teetering on the edge of the same creepy neo-socialism that grips all liberals in times of distress (the theory being that if Democrats promise to give the people more and more, the people will love them again).
Motivated by the elections, Kennedy made his Big Point almost immediately: I categorically reject the deceptive and dangerous claim that the outcome last November was somehow a sweeping, or a modest, or even a miniature mandate for reactionary measures like privatizing Social Security, redistributing the tax burden in the wrong direction, or packing the federal courts with reactionary judges. Those proposals were barely mentioned or voted on in an election dominated by memories of 9/11, fear of terrorism, the quagmire in Iraq, and relentlessly negative attacks on our Presidential candidate. [And not on ours?!]
Interestingly put. Would it soothe Senator Kennedys mind to know that John won the presidency with a much smaller popular vote majority than President Bushs in November (118,574 over Richard Nixon), and yet wasnt ever told he had no mandate to fight Communism, lower taxes or claim the moon? The question is, At what exact margin of victory can a Republican president legitimately claim the right to advance his ideas? The answer is, At victory, whether the margin is three votes or three million votes.
But thats backward thinking. Lets talk about today. There's no doubt we [Democrats] must do a better job of looking within ourselves and speaking out for the principles we believe in, and for the values that are the foundation of our actions. Americans need to hear more, not less, about those values. All right then. Unlike the Republican Party, we believe our values unite us as Americans, instead of dividing us. If the White House's idea of bipartisanship is that we have to buy whatever partisan ideas they send us, we're not interested. Well, one could make the argument that Democratic values have united at least a majority of Americans, against Democrats, since 1994. No?
Anyway, what principles do Democrats believe in? Senator Kennedy suggests America spend more and / or begin paying for these things (among others): Tuition for high school kids accepted to colleges; graduate school tuition for low income students seeking advanced degrees in math and science (why just those?); early education and healthy developments for the youngest children; new schools and the modernization of old ones; research and development; broadband for every home, school, and business in America; mass transit.
Uh-huh; and? To revitalize the American dream, we also need to renew the battle to make health care affordable and available to all our people. Sadly, in America today, the miracles of modern medicine are too often the province only of the wealthy. The answer is Medicare, whose 40th birthday we will celebrate in July. I propose that as a 40th birthday gift to the American people, we expand Medicare over the next decade to cover every citizen - from birth to the end of life.
It is suggested we pay for these spending increases by anyone? raising payroll taxes. Payroll taxes should be part of the financing, but so should general revenues, to make the financing as progressive as possible. The reader should forgive my ignorance, but if theres a difference between money collected from payroll taxes and general revenue, please let me know. If Kennedy means to separate whatever would be in the treasury from newly collected money for these purposes, then okay. But the suspicion is that hes playing a verbal game of three card monty and hoping no one will notice.
The cause claimed is the peoples well being. That said, how much does Senator Kennedy propose we spend per year, forever, on expanding Medicare to a universal entitlement for all Americans? More or less than the amount President Bush would spend, over a decade, converting portions of Social Security payroll tax deductions to private accounts? Is what matters our well being, or that government provides that well being? Dont ask, he just may answer.
"I reject reality, and substitute my own" - Any Liberal.
Well done. Sadly, it is so true.
'I'm smarter than any taxpayer in Massachusetts'
/Sarcasm OFF
Ted would be on the streets drunk if Old Joe wasn't rich.
Is POWER a principle?
Yeah, really. Instead, he's in office drunk.
Great pic.
Barney Frank is prolly wishing he had an inflatable doll ala that pic.
I'm amazed he hasn't passed from liver failure yet.
Picture of liver above.
My folks have a copy of Teddy Bare somewhere. I should call them and have them find it for me. I haven't read it in years.
Iloved to show it to my leftie friends (well one leftie friend)and watch their faces turn red. HEHEHE
His liver gets plenty of exercise. But he does look like a walking heart attack.
Nothing kills brain cells faster than straight Scotch Whiskey, especially in abundance.
That's grotesque!
Uncle Teddy an eastern elite...ugly...can't believe someone like him is a senator. What've we come to.
Not only is he stupid, he a fat, drunken, murdering felon, slob..........
Oh.......that felt good. I feel so much better getting that off my chest!! :-)
I have a great idea, Ted. Rather than taxing initiative and productivity let's fund all the kooky leftist schemes of the Great Society by confiscating all inherited assets accumulated prior to LBJ. Yeah, that's the ticket. Let's take the money and assets from money and assets inherited in the pre- Johnsonian past rather than stifle future earnings.
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